Skip to main content

Posts

Stop Having Shallow Conversations

Walking through corridors on a busy day it's easy to participate in shallow conversation with students and it's even easier to ignore them all together, put your head down and get to your next lesson (or the tranquility of the staff room!). Students need to feel as if they are an important part of our lives. They want us to care and they want to have meaningful conversations with them. Unfortunately too many schools are rife with shallow and meaningless conversations that are more detrimental to student motivation than not speaking to them at all. Let me give you some examples of shallow conversations I've regularly heard during my time in education: "Hey, how are you?" "Are you OK?" "How's your day going?" Initially these appear to be absolutely fine comments to be saying to students. They seem pretty caring and considerate, however think about the responses you normally get from these questions? "Yeah, fine", "Not t...
Recent posts

Why does everything need to be measurable?

Over the past 2 decades the education system has become obsessed with trying to measure every aspect of performance. We measure outcomes, quality of teaching and learning, the impact of interventions, student progress, quality of marking and feedback and the list goes on. In January 2018 figures compiled by the Liberal Democrats found that "a ltogether 1.3 million days have been taken off by teachers for stress and mental health reasons in the last four years, including around 312,000 in 2016-17" (The Guardian ' Epidemic of stress' blamed for 3,750 teachers on long-term sick leave'  11/01/2018 ).  One of the key reasons teacher's feel under pressure within the work place is the constant scrutiny they find themselves  under as schools strive to measure all aspects of performance. Even the idea that you can measure students progress during a 30 minute observation would have been laughed out of school staff rooms 30 years ago, but these days we find this to...

Why Should You Teach Internationally?

For many people (myself included when I was working in the UK) overseas teaching is a bit of a cop out. I used to think it's for teachers who couldn't hack it in the UK or who wanted to make a quick buck in the Middle East. When receiving applications for a vacancy in my department I used to disregard the applications from teachers working at British school overseas as I thought that they didn't have what it takes to be successful in a UK school. Then I decided to leave the UK and work overseas. I made this decision in conjunction with my wife (who's also a teacher) as we couldn't save enough money to get on the property ladder whilst working in the UK and the workload was becoming unbearable (sound familiar?). We decided to apply for jobs in the Middle East, go and save enough money for a deposit on a house in the UK and then come back 2 years later- a fool proof plan, or so we thought! We are now in our third year living and teaching in Thailand! So how di...

Realistic Ways of Managing Your Workload

I have been teaching outside of the UK for 2 years now, but over the past 2 years I have seen an increasing number of teachers take to Twitter to complain about the unrealistic workload expectations and the effect it is having on them outside of work. I also see multiple blogs outlining how to reduce workload or how to cope with the fall out of increasing workload so I thought I'd write my own blog to see if I can support teachers feeling like this. I was always good at managing workload. I ran a busy PE Department of 6 staff and most of the time I was able to leave shortly after my extra curricular club or fixture and didn't do much work at home. 'But you don't have to mark books' I hear you scream. In my last year in the UK I taught 47 GCSE PE and 18 BTEC Level 3 students. That's enough marking to keep anyone busy! Here are my tips of how to ensure that you keep workload manageable: 1. Write a stop doing list. This will be a familiar topic for any...

The Best Teachers are Obsessive

Think about the best teacher you've ever seen, maybe when you were at school or someone you've had the privilege to work with. Make a quick list of the skills and qualities they have? I would take an educated guess that you listed some pretty amazing qualities such as passionate, caring, determined (or similar) and not hard skills such as organised, good time management, great subject knowledge etc. When hiring new teachers what do you look for; subject knowledge, experience, track record of delivering results, interview performance, affordability? All of these would be valid reasons for recruiting a specific individual (in an idealistic world maybe not affordable but with recent pressures on budget this is now a reality). I would argue that all of these are the wrong reasons to hire someone. The people we want teaching the students in our school are the teachers similar to the one you identified at the start of this blog. Subject knowledge can be learnt, ex...

What are your Core Values?

What does your school value?  What is their number one value?  How do you know as a member of staff what to prioritise? These are questions that most staff would have asked at some point in their career. The culture of a school is a key component to the success of their students, the wellbeing of their staff and ultimately how effective they are as an organisation. The problem with creating a positive culture in schools is the external pressures placed upon them. For example, a school may value developing all students holistically and will build opportunities into the curriculum and extracurricular programmes for them to push themselves outside their comfort zones through activities such as trips, sports, arts and drama. Most people would agree that this is a valuable culture to have as a school, but what if an inspection then identifies under performance on academics? Does the school stand by their values and risk the leadership team losing their jobs due to poor inspe...

Can We Actually Make Lesson Observations Supportive?

Most teachers get nervous about observation lessons. Whether the school agrees with grading lessons or not, the teacher feels as if they are being judged on a very small snapshot of their working practice. Most senior leaders overseeing teaching and learning (myself included) talk about the need for lesson observations to be ‘non-judgmental’ and ‘supportive’. Lesson observations have been around for decades (or long before my time at least!) and I guarantee that the first time a school completed them it was focused on making sure people were doing their jobs correctly. The process, by its nature, is judgmental. It’s about accountability. The problem is that over the past decade schools have looked to sell the process as one of support. “We are going to help you identify areas for development and then put a CPD programme in place to help you” to most teachers this actually means “We are going to judge you, give you a chance to improve, and then judge you again”. It doesn’t...